Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 7, 1959, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAQW TWO ffll DAILY TAR REEL THURSDAY, MAY 7, 155? 1 ' 1 Tf " Bleached Body I he Mt . . hnl body ( Neto M. C. Parker, .hoim1 i .1 J i t ol .i white women, has been htuiitl n the Mississippi-Louisiana bonier in a met. 1 lie bnl u.is so bloated. waterlogged and maimed that it was impossible to deteun ine out the taie ol the individual, much less .Miie idiiitit until .n I'M linnet print te j n i w is made available. And. in aiiothci patt ol the South, lour Ax !i tit nun h.iv e it iouslv and sadistic I y taped at he a 1 lot ida Neuro ('olleye. 1 1 1 1 1 i its in this i ii-st have i a iuiii; Mt 1 1 I H ItllUU 1 . t t n i . 1 1 1 u, 1 1 1 . t. tlx- itiuh 1 1 1114 issue is not to liiii t'i .ic u j .1 'i im I !e li thee atioiious acts ol u'( tu e to iistu e, but to tediue and indeed, to obtitt tate. the soit ol tlixisioti between bu rn in luniks that tan tause such acts in he tiist plate. UNC Budget Money, Money It t p t n d that the oiut Appiopriatioiis ( oiiiniii it t -l the State Assembly and Senate uiil nit im MUMftiiiu- next week its letoin 1. it ;u! .: n lot the next Meiiiiiiim's budget to be .on a: !i d lo the tluec c omponeuts ot the ( . 10. tit tl I'liaeisiiN t( Ninth C.aiolina. b.th t the tutuie ol the thiee institutions ui.! d tit j. r.ils 011 the ie pott ol this ;ioup. I . t it !(,. t ! 1 1 1 in-' the t 01 1 1 se o I tilt temaiir ui t! ( bt ; e lea 1 inn the news til what our lawri.irt'.s will 1 1 oiiiiiieiul be appi opi iatctl a 1. to nv t v. s;i t; m tie a 1. amount 01 sp.u c n t!ie tdiUnial ji.i-'e to this piobleni, hoping ti.U il.ion !i these ttlolls. the oiits ol ccjtl" t r 1 Ik d n! u.lt III s I i 1.1 be heal 1 1 oil this C 1 Uc ill i .u ' I he l'int isit ttwlay stands at the cioss i . . t . U . ,i appiopi iatt l put it stands in the iniddie an inn i s 1 1 ion. It knows siuely tli.it tin- Miijt tiattit will push it on. but it s i litt i .t : 1 1 io make the decision ot which w a t "4i i ! Us own at t ml. " I he pa siioiis that ate most major bebne thr I hulas aie ones ol adequacy tiMf p'i:j-.e. ti a 4111eni.it ion eisus tour liimiil i .i -amat ion. number etsus individ 1 1 1 1 1 ! an. I 1 nisolitlatioii eisus planning.' 'hte aie .11 questions that will in one v. ; .t a 1 1' -t 1 1 1 1 be sohetl b the money given t. the ( .n itl atetl l'nieisit. I or. the lunds m ittie will tleteimine the excellence or l.uk theienl. the uiowth. ami the extent of planning I hex will either be sullit ient to cans this I'lmcis'ity to greater height, or will leaxc us in the oitl ol the status quo. 'li.es wt!! c illit i be snltitient to keep those y.M.d tainliN liKinbets we already have and to iet t nit new ones ol high caliber, or will diie the be ne i onto higher paying jxists at All the i nioie- e ntiting institutions. nti tney will eitbei be siil I ic ient to purchase the btM.ks. mm in h I at ilities ami matetials to pur m-.te si h. thills pnisiiit ol the highest order, oi will it pe l iniellee tualism. ptogress and at tainment beiaue ol a latk el the necessary with whith lgain the knowletlge lt go (oMn I I (1. I hio is t!ie tho'-ie belote the legislators in e i Kale i le ill Works Of Minor Poet Dear Sir, Noting that your paper ha.s re cently published two selections from the works of a minor poet, 1 respectfully submit, in hopes of publication, the complete works of one of the most minor poets I know, T. Buie Costen It's Too Nice A Suit T o Alter Just Scrunch Down And Walk Like A Cripple" . i!ii moment. 'Mien's is the piob ihot.sing between a gieat university ot pi! aiiothe-i sihol. And with tins choice v ill ;.( hand and hand the Inline of this state. oith ( aiolina will latk the leadcis in .,11 , the nioiis lields unless these funds .tie piosided. I he lutiiie of this .state is in leahiv. the lutuie ol the Consolidated Uli'f vetsiiN ..I oith C.aiolina. Th otfinsl ntudrai publication die fuMltniioi, ,..r.1 of ! University .f North Turotina. ihere l fHihlislu-ti daily licrjl Mtiid4T and txarmiiation period irwj uiutitr: lrrm tntrrnl ecoml cU ir.itlfr In ihe pct itfu In Chipel II. II. N . unJi-i th act of March 8 1870 Si.hst ription ritei: $4 W) ptr (uu r. n pi la rriateti liy the News Inc., Oarrlxiro, N. C Editor Associate Editor Mauaj'.intf Ktiitors c . Sttc tt lb Vntvrrv'.r of . ? North Ctrolmu vthith fifit optttHI its door i i Ju n mi r ' T 9 1 . .... DAVIS B. YOUNG FRANK CROWTHER CHUCK ROSS RON SHUMATE business Manager AtiviTtisinj Man.icr News Etlitr Frvnw Ktlitor Asst. News Ktlitor tr t s Editor feature Editor s"-t. Adv. Matiaer Cirt'jlation Manager t-Ljcritioa Manager WALKER BLANTON EREI) KATZIN ANN FRYE ANTHONY WOLFF " "ZT"" ElT RINER ellTott COO P ER MARY ALICrfhOWLETrE LEE ARBOGAST BOB WALKER AVO.Y THOMAS .MY SIN CONTEMPLATES ANGERS My In eoTitemplatts angels As you might scan a history My sin contemplates angels In a manner very like The act itself The kin has no lists but eyes flat twisted oval leering My kin contemplates angels As ytu ndglit strike your sister My sin contemplate angel In a manner very like The act itself Its soaring thought squalid Sweat beneath flimsy wings My sin contemplates angels As yu might stroke your hair My siu contemplates angrls In a manner very like The act itself Furtive, atone, in secret Un natural, out of perversion My sin contemplates angels As you might mumble I love beer As yU udht cry with tage with grief with txaperatiun As you might lead ycur work Quiet AND by yuuiself Hop iig you talent yet mke a revision Thoughtless, out of incapacity Helpless, out of inability Wordless, out of incoherence As you might construct a poem Impetuous, unreasoning Unique thoughtless, best for gotten As you might lie awake Alter hours, printing To test our credulity My sin contemplates angels As you might shoot a poet Testing your skill Ou small life As you might accept your fate My sin contemplates angels Iu the vacuum ol Us head Flinging words about Confusing My sin contemplates angels (Only when It Isn't crawling) And is resting on my shoe sole In a manner veiy like the act itself. T. Kuie Cofeten Sigma Chi Letter On Recent Derby To Tht Editor: Hammurabi Had A Code Gary Greer The editors. ol the Woman's Handbook might be -more triuhitil ii they inserted a statement (unha qulitying the "Carolina l ady". Ill- addition to her charm and genteel mantlets, she a!so. possesses a certain dazed amenabiiit) she; pielers submitting to the indiinius of the -Sighva. Chi Derby to being ImiUI elio'ugli" to complain about th'eui. Rather than suggest that she really enjoys her role ot patsy-for-the-attei noon, I take the attitude th:'i she is reluctant to risk being railed a etblanket ajiid all-around spoil .sport The c ry of "AH. be a SPORT" has been for ever teinovetl from the athetic field: it now serves ;s the signal for all activities directly opposed to the teaching of count ty, home and MOTHKR. I associate it with good old Camp Ximrod lor Cirls. anil the begay-when-yoii-fall-olf-the-hoise a n d leanrto-love-sleep-ing in a b e tl-f u 1 l-ol-toothpaste philosophy. This attitude mav be helplul if you want to This is the paradox of student learn to ride, but I could never see that the govt-rnnu-nt at Carolina: the peo- toothpaste treatment did anything for its vie - pie who one week introduce a ,jm )eVontl treating a lilet hue distrust, and bill giving the power to the Pub- ,la,m, o ,u.r tornu;,ltors. lications Board to apix)int the cli- .... . , ,. . . . . , , , tor of the Yack find it necessary " S,-ma 1)l'rhy l )hc n' ol(l to introduce legislation a couple t xit 1 ii ja.Nt e- ott a larger scale (the jieople nr of weeks later to make .student volved are k.rger). with the change that the government more "reprcsenta- victims know beforehand what they are get tive." t inj into. The tormentors have become crew-' Such is exactly the case with ' nng men who plan this diversion as the bill introduced in legislature part of our much-touted "preparation for providing that all representatives life." Xo doubt this training will be handy must visit their constituents. If when they are old enough to attend the the legislature votes tonight in American Legion and Shriners' conventions, favor of this bill, it will be a There is always a market for this sort of fiank admission on the part of thing: the "Three Stooges" aer very popular its members that they are ir- (xvith the AI.l.-CARTOOX Show set): gbdi resportsible. that they need chil- toi.,, homs j,., a,uvs htcn K.aviy attend- VS' 'l Sft' an0,,hPr L In the case of the Derby, the combatants of those "brilliant" efforts to leg- ... , , , , , islate morality or goodness or double as downs, a, .posture which has been something, something which can never be instituted by law, some- thin1? which can be had only by education. To some of us old democrats, the term legislator somehow im plies representation. To most ev eryone in the.se United States, the fact that a person holds an oltice somehow means that he is re sponsible to those who elected him. If such is the case, and if the present legislature is not cognizant of it, then surely it must be quite a radical group, a group which apparently has very little faith in its constituency, else it would not have ratified legislation which would have tak en away the right of the people ta elect the editor of the year book. Gentlemen, there seems to he a slight inconsistency. It appears that at least some of the mem bers of thjt august group of law makers are either suffering from acute .suspicion of themselves or of chronic suspicion of those who elected them, of those who chose them to lead, to carry the banner of better student government. Side Swipes Rusty Hammond Campus Scene: A mother hav ing a very difficult time convin cing her four-year-old son that he isn't helping anyone by taking parking tickets off parked cars (so "they won't have to pay the cops"). The main trouble with mama Henderson is labor pains. There's so durn many pre-dawn 'ceremonies 3round this place it's a! wonder anyone even goes : to bed. ' An un-burning lights. issue: library The Playmakers are scheduled to give-"Inherit The Wind" this week-end in the Forest Theatre, but unless they're lucky they might have to change to "The Rains Came." "Humphrey Predicts Democra tic Convention To Be Wide Open." Congratulations on the understa tement of the yar, Hugh. The University no doubt thought it was a good thing when it made it against the rules to give a quiz less than a week before fi l.als. But the professors have jumped on it - they p:le up the quizzes in those last two days and the students wind up going through finals twice each semester. The Student Body was had, and bad, when the boys in Woollen Gym took it upon themselves to move the Duke game to Thanks giving next year. It doesn't seem to make much of a darn any more what the students think, as long as those dollars keep rolling in. quite suttesful in the world of professional wrestling. Xo glowing report til the good fun had by all at the derby can change the character ol the events in it. The handnalking contest should not need an entrant with an injured back tti convince anyone that it was danger ous as well, as degrading. This year's "secret event" was something ;A from a nightmare planned by bullies for the entertainment of satlists: six girls, teetering on the shoulders of si boys, theii lave covered by stockings hold ing eggs on their heads, swatting at each oth er with deatl lish. The participants finished the contest bloody and smeared with egg, their hands cut and scraped by the fish scales anil bones. The Derby is a disgrace to the University ;'s a whole, as well as to those people who participate actively in it. By participants, I mean to include the sorority members who stayed ; way from the derby in an effort to di'4.ocbate themselves from it. If they had least ins for their disapproval, they should have voised them in their meetings. At least one sorority nearly didn't enter the derby this year. Another's members are considering not entering next year. They probably will enter their junior members won't know much about the tlerbv before hand, and enough of these new girls will be anxious to please and not too choosy about how. Arriving at the Derby, they will find that it is too late for them to back out. The editors of the Handbook or even of the Rushing Manual might say that the Car olina Coed is anxious to "conduct hreself as a lady at all times' but one the time of the Sigma Chi Derby, when her conduct changes radically. Is it possible that these are her true coitus? Jeannetie Hortviby That most wonderful of all cam pus organizations, the Women's Residence Council has done it again. Now cpcxls ; Will be cam pused jf their bed , is , unmade three times or if coke bottles are found in their rooms. Isn't it just so sweet to have someone to look alter cur-little-girls? Add cliches: Once there was a bride that wasn't "radiant." When this column (?) was writ ten, the New York Yankees were in seventh place. If possible, we would like to see them finish a strong ninth. (I SAW) 1 saw a moon: It was shining brightly In its blue of day; And I took its trodden path, Straight and level on its way, Until at end I found An ugly, cold, unfertile ground That but reflected light. I saw a sun; It was burning brightly In its dark of night; And I took its steep, Winding path of spotted light, Until at end I found It disappeared, And I looked out and saw the stars. Charli Whitfield 5 to YOU FEL ( SORRY' FOR THE f; ( 6IRLL0MO p ... KIJ HAlHOU) ABOUT YOU ?dOY, I REALLY FEEL FOR THE BLOCKHEAD WHO 15 DUMB ENOUGH TO MARRY Y00 YOU'RE F0RSETTIN6 ONE JHiNS CHARLIE BROUJN BRiO5 areV-7 V BEAUTIFUL" - J K -o C -4 o 5 ca i -rii--!3a j. euT CAUr6p vpQGy wwv oo you mapta bst 1 mn V: UW!SlNBVSaSUNisiPACS05S I UXg VOU SAiC? TO ANt? Hg WHBTHS3 H6 60TTH6 MOX16 ( UAf I ''ZiS" l TWAT ASTiCtft IN 0066 Lift'' I V PQPPtO MS ON MV TO P0S ME ON ff V RU i- I TIU.iN'HOWtOCOMTSOU l -v , N0S& FmfT N0S IIs I CAUUS C V7 V Wyf j IH5ECT5 By HYPHOSIgJ WsTT T (jY lOGV? VOVRS X l MV PAU Mtaj k fofh I AfSIENOty. JrK I P0VTY0U 5lrJL eiUIK05fP 8 O FT.. iWi Roundup Dave Jones Not all pieces of legislation proposed by the members of UNC's Student Legislature are so popu lar and so well constructed that they breeze through the body by a unanamous vote of acceptance. There were three measures defeated, and two refered back to the Rules Committee by action ot the body Thursday night. They were all written by Representatives Jim Crownover and myself, (both SPk The bill to appropriate $78.00 to the Junior Class lest by a two vote margin. Wade Smith and his clas officers made a serious and a noble effort to prove that class officers can do something. They held i series of meetings, planned a program and set up committees to handle next year's work as the Sen ior Class. These committees were to have been ap pointed and their work explained to them at the Junior picnic on May 12th. Wade Smith made his first appearance before the Student Legislature Thursday night. He did a competent job of presenting his case and topped hi? presentation off with a clever bit of humor that drew an ovation from the body. His request was nut passed. But the fact that he did a lot of work and was seriously concerned with the problems facing his class cannot be denied or voted out of existance by two legislators. The bill to appropriate enough money to send another delegate to NSA's conference at Evanston. Ill, this summer also lost by two votes. Student Bod., leaders in both parties were interested in the ac quisition of this additional delegate, yet anti-NSA and anti-SPENDING sentiment formed a coalition that killed it. Student Body President Gray's reasons for want ing the extra delegate are simple: There are eight regular delegates provided for in the 1959 60 Bud get; by tradition he must send the Vice President, David Grigg, the Secretary, Sue Wood, the Treasur er, Bob Bingham, the Assistant to the President Jim Crownover, DTH Editor, Davis Young, and the NSA co-ordinator (unannounced). He will go himself under a seperate appropriation. This leaves only two appointments out of the entire student body to be made by his own choice. Gray also feels that he should send at least one student leader who is anti-NSA to the convention. He feels that certain misconceptions about NSA could be cleared up, and that the persons who form erly led the fight against NSA could possibly be active in promoting the good that its ideas can do the campus. He wanted a total of ten people in his Ielega tion, and endured, what is in my opinion, undue abuse and expression of a lack confidence in his opinions by the members of the Finance Committee and certain people who spoke on the floor. Two votes were decisive in this action too. The bill to provide machinery to have the rules committee review controversial presidential appoint ments was just plain unpopular. No one, outside of the author, felt that there was any need for it, so it died by a voice vote. The bill to allow legislators to hold their seat after moving out of their districts went back to committee. The author felt that there was so much controversial stuff coming up. that the sesMon would be long and hot, and that there were some minor changes in wording that he wanted made in a proposed amendment so he asked to have the bill returned to committee. The "mosquito" bill was withdrawn by the au thor after he had taken certain steps toward the aleviation of the problem. Finally, this leaves the Jim Crownover - Ralph Cummings-Jim Scott bill on compulsory attendance at meetings with constituencies. The parliamentary maneuvering on this bill very tricky. First, the defeated bill had to be re vived. This was done by a motion of reconsideration by one of the legislators who opposed it the werk before. Discussion ensued. A motion to have the bill tabled was ruled out of order. Jim Scott (SP) then introduced a complete set ot articles to replace those in the old bill. I had read those articles in Ralph Cumming's handwriting prior to the writing of the last column. I felt then that they were going from bad to worse in an impossible situation. An effort was made to show the proponents of this bill what was basically wrong with it, but to no avail. Scott's (or Cumming's) amendments were accept ed. Then a motion to send the whole thing back to committee was made and recognized. It was argued that the proposed changes were not in the proper form, that no committee had seen them, and that the legislators hadn't had a chance to look them over. Technically, I feel that a bill cannot be con structed like this one and be legal. It calls for a long string of rules that require certain action on the part of the legisaltors, and provides penalties that could be invoked if they do not take that ac tion. Then in its last article it says let the Rules committee draw up changes to make the provisions a part of the by-laws. I am afraid that this sort of thing cannot be legally done. By-laws changes must be drawn up and presented as such and passed by TWO THIRDS of the body. If Crownover and company can't &:t a simple majority to pass a bad bill, I wonder where they think they are going to get TWO THIRDS to pass a worse one. f
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 7, 1959, edition 1
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